Baroque guitar - Santiago de Murcia - Jacaras and Fandango - Polivios - Stradivari Model
Вставка
- Опубліковано 12 сер 2018
- Spanish Baroque music performed on a Stradivarius model Baroque guitar.
Santiago de Murcia (1673-1739)
Jacaras and Fandango
Performed by Polivios Issariotis
I have recently been encouraged to start offering lessons via Skype, especially for advanced classical guitar students or classical guitarists who want to segue to historical or ethnic instruments (lute, vihuela, baroque guitar, oud, etc). For more info: www.polivios.net/teach
www.polivios.net
For more detailed information about the Baroque guitar and the music of Santiago de Murcia, visit my website:
www.polivios.net/baroque-guitar
Be sure to subscribe to my UA-cam to channel to stay informed about new videos. I generally post a new video every week.
Wonderful ! sehr schöne Spiel! Wunderbares klang , sauber und genau. Danke sehr großes Maestro!! Grande maestro!
AMAZING! I could listen forever. Practice my whole life and could never do it. Crazy to think it is Baroque music, sounds like flamenco. He is some kind of virtuoso that reminds me of a young Paco de Lucia! Love it! I look forward to more!
Origins run deep eh
Baroque music heavily encouraged improvisation and introduction of personal touches. I'm not sure how this exact piece is written, but it's possible this performer added some of his own personal flair.
@@Quicksilver_Cookiethe books of Santiago de Murcia are written in tablatures . They features mostly indications for chords , rasguedos especially in the rythm explanations or acompaniment and suggestions for the ornaments (appoggiatures, trills, mordants), but as most of the composers of that era the author let you free of making the compositions your owns , he just suggests and gives examples
As for flamenco, the thing is that fandango and jacara are old popular Spanish dances from south of Spain that shares harmonic and rythmic similarities with modern flamenco
Absolutely inspiring
Best baroque guitar video I have ever seen! Incredible instrument and such virtuosic playing. Kudos!
Bravissimo
Ahhhhhh. So beautiful and emotional... Thank you! ♥️
Some of the greatest sounds that have graced my ears in a very long time. Excellent skill. I find myself in your debt. Thank you.
Wow! So glad I subscribed to this channel. I have never seen guitar playing like this before! I was drawn to his Indian composi
tions for ensemble - I didn't know he did this too - what a talented guy!
Just discovered your channel! Absolutely lovely... Watched another episode where you discussed the history of innovation and the featured guitar with the detachable necks. Well done!
Beautiful sound
Master playing! Some of the finest guitar-art I have seen or heard! Congratulations Maestro!
A lovely piece.
Beautiful instrument ❤️
Freaking captivating !!!
Amazing! Bravo!
Increíble!!!
Magnífica interpretación!!!
Fantastisch! Wirklich das beste, was ich je gesehen habe! Toll! Meister!
That is King! Amazing!
Wow! Talk about virtuoso! Beautiful, gorgeous guy plays brilliantly. Subscribed!
WONDERWALL
Excelente!!!
Superb!
Wow! So cool! I love it too! You are beautiful!
Great !
Beautiful playing and video!
Whenever we hear guitar music on classical radio stations, this is usually the instrument it's being played on.
Bravisimo!!!
Great vid!
Man, you're good.
Love ukulele
sick!
🙌🏻🎶👏🏻
I cannot find a high quality one of these anywhere...
Please show all of both hands all the time!!
Great, what books do You recommend to get all of the tabs made for baroque guitar?
😍
I like Baroque..but I'm extra strong on Rococo..
❤
Still for sale? Best /Ferran
Lovely tone on that Stradivari model - who made it and what is the string length?
741mm if it is an accurate copy. That’s huge!
According to this article thedutchluthier.files.wordpress.com/2016/11/stradivari-article-al-122-lr.pdf
The original Stradivari « sabionari » ua-cam.com/video/yGKan6eX5ug/v-deo.html
@@gingerjam2192Damn, that's like an electric bass almost, pretty big.
Fabula a fabula is a grand journey
What's up with the double strings on this instrument, but the high sting doesn't have one? Why do they appear to be tuned the same and not like a 12 string (in octaves)? Is there 12 string classical guitar (or whatever this is) that uses the octaves?
It looks like it's ususally five double courses, but the instrument is missing a peg. You can see the empty hole in the headstock. I'm guessing that would have been replaced not long after this performance, but they just had to get it done so they played it missing a string.
I don't believe it's missing a peg; baroque guitars, like lutes tend to have a single chanterelle or highest pitched string.
@@wapolo1974 you are correct
It's a five course instrument but baroque guitars typically only have 9 strings. No low E.
yeah, some have said the correct answer. the baroque guitar is tuned same notes as a guitar without the low e, however on lute and baroque/renaissance guitar the highest string is single, not double, to make the melodies clearer. in addition, these guitars are tuned in a re entrant tuning like a ukulele somewhat, where the low strings are pitched an octave up from normal. this allows for certain runs not possible on a normal guitar. players choose different configurations of unison and octave low strings.
Tuning?
Do you know fibula music and tales
Why is the ninth string missing? Is that intentional or accidental?
Baroque guitar utilizes courses but the final is often left single purposefully 😅
How dare you hit the Stradivarius guitar!😮?
The original Stradivari “Sabionari” : ua-cam.com/video/yGKan6eX5ug/v-deo.html
ezio?
I'm glad there was such thing as musical evolution into blues, jazz and rock...
Idk why i cant help but think of the Godfather in the beginning part
Flamenco, about as you would expect it in the 20th century - but baroque.😮
I like the music and performance; hate the editing. Feels like I'm blacking out intermittently.
Я бы не разрешал бить пальцем по деке инструмента Страдивари!
To me the Baroque guitar is the transition from ancient lute to classical guitar.
The vihuela was a Spanish instrument from the Renaissance and is the transition from lute to guitar, it was tuned the same as a lute but had less strings so you can strum (you can’t strum well on a lute because there are so many courses). The baroque guitar came after the vihuela, and has nothing in common with the lute. In fact, the baroque guitar and classical guitar are tuned the same way except for the low E not being present on the baroque guitar. The baroque lute and the baroque guitar were around the same time (mainly the Spanish favored the guitar the most and the Germans the lute), and the baroque lute has different tuning than the renaissance lute and is played in a different way.
@@jbik140 many people believe the guitar was invented by the Moors.
@@marvinthemaniac7698 Melba or Mary Tyler?
@@Muttonchop_USA LOL! Good joke. The Moors were a tribe of Muslim people from North Africa who invaded Spain in the 8th century A.D.
@@marvinthemaniac7698 and brought with them the chordophones that became the lute, vihuela, and the guitar. "Lute" itself is an anglicisation of the arabic al-oud. Have a look on youtube for a video titled " Early Music 1: Arngeir, gittern", you can see a beautiful example of an instrument that is an ancestor of our modern guitar (I would include a link, but I don't think the comment will stay up if I do)
Bt
Tale story tale are different tale is chimney story tale folk chimming
Excellent, bravo! Your technique is highly developed, but it seems like you're too bound to the notes you must play than to the spirit of the composition. Let yourself go deeper, I'm sure that with your level of technique you can astonish us even more! (Please forgive any grammar and syntactic error, I'm not a native English speaker).
Thank you for checking out the vid and music. Actually for a large part of the performance there are NO notes and I either composed or improvised the piece.
Can it Nothing else matters?
Djent machine